Ep. 296 Maximize Your Results, Minimize Your Time: Five Tips for Learning Liberty
Release Date: 09/20/2020
Tom Woods Show, Archive 1
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What a pleasure to be joined once again by David Stockman! I strongly urge you to visit his blog and check out his latest book, The Great Deformation
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Everyone's talking about income inequality, and I thought this article by Robert Higgs -- "" -- was worth an episode's worth of commentary.
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Nick Giambruno, senior editor of , a Doug Casey publication, joined me to discuss international diversification, and why it isn't just for investments or for the rich.
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In the course of today's episode I mentioned a number of books I consider indispensable. Here are a few of them: , by Ron Paul. This is a good one for beginners. It has a good track record as a proselytizing device. It's what I recommend you give to someone who has indicated some interest in our ideas. , by Michael Huemer. Don’t let the dull title fool you. This book is comprehensive, original, exciting, and very convincing. It is a relentless assault, by a philosopher, on the standard arguments for government. Not one of them is left standing. , by Hans-Hermann Hoppe. This book blew me...
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Tom talks to Jeff Berwick about history, education, homeschooling, how to win people over, and more. Check our Jeff's show, Anarchast, at .
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Tom discusses a variety of issues as a guest on .
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Jay Richards, co-author of , talks Tolkien and liberty.
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Tom talks to about his book (Cambridge University Press, 2013).
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joins Tom to discuss the Keynesian disaster in Japan.
info_outlineIn the course of today's episode I mentioned a number of books I consider indispensable. Here are a few of them:
The Revolution: A Manifesto, by Ron Paul. This is a good one for beginners. It has a good track record as a proselytizing device. It's what I recommend you give to someone who has indicated some interest in our ideas.
The Problem of Political Authority: An Examination of the Right to Coerce and the Duty to Obey, by Michael Huemer. Don’t let the dull title fool you. This book is comprehensive, original, exciting, and very convincing. It is a relentless assault, by a philosopher, on the standard arguments for government. Not one of them is left standing.
The Economics and Ethics of Private Property, by Hans-Hermann Hoppe. This book blew me away when I first read it. Its title makes it sound dull. It is one of the most intellectually exciting books I have ever read.
The Politically Incorrect Guide to the Constitution. Even if you don't care about the Constitution, or if you're a Spoonerite, or whatever, this is an excellent example of a book that is (1) packed with information, and (2) leaves the standard narrative in shreds.
Civil Rights: Rhetoric or Reality? Possibly Thomas Sowell's most underrated book. I hear people talk about several of his other titles all the time, but I never hear this one mentioned. This one is 140 pages long, with big print. It contains more information and more devastating analysis than most books three times that length.